Hutchison v. Aetna Life Insurance Co.

189 P.2d 586, 182 Or. 639, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 144
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 189 P.2d 586 (Hutchison v. Aetna Life Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchison v. Aetna Life Insurance Co., 189 P.2d 586, 182 Or. 639, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 144 (Or. 1948).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This action was instituted by plaintiff, Ada E. Hutchison, to recover for the alleged accidental death of her late husband, Orvil A. Hutchison, to whom the defendant, Aetna Life Insurance Company, a corporation, had issued on September 13,1942, a group accidental death and dismemberment policy, in which plaintiff had been designated the beneficiary. Under the terms of this policy the insurance company agreed to pay to the beneficiary therein named the sum of $2,000, in the event that the death of the insured “resulted directly, and independently of all other causes, from bodily injuries * * * sustained solely through external, violent, and accidental means”, and was not “caused directly or indirectly, wholly or partly, by bodily or mental infirmity”. The ease was tried to a jury which returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $2,000, the face of the policy, and the further sum of $500 as attorneys’ fees. From the judgment entered thereon defendant has appealed.

Two of defendant’s assignments of error are based upon the refusal of the court to grant (1) its motion for a judgment of involuntary nonsuit, and (2) its *642 motion for a directed verdict in its favor. Failure of the plaintiff to prove that the death of her husband resulted from an accidental injury of the kind covered by the policy was assigned by defendant as the reason why these motions should be granted. Since the motion for a directed verdict presents for decision the same question that is raised by the motion for judgment of. non-suit, Portland Postal Employees Credit Union v. United States National Bank, 171 Or. 40, 48, 135 P. (2d) 467, 136 P. (2d) 259, we shall consider only the alleged error of the court in denying defendant’s motion for a directed verdict.

The evidence is substantially as follows: Orvil Hutchison was 34 years old at the time of his death, which occurred on January 10, 1945. At the age of 12 years he had an operation for a ruptured appendix, which is referred to later in connection with insured’s death. He was described as an active, athletic type of man; he participated in athletics in school, and was a trained boxer. He began working for the Oregon Shipbuilding Ooroporation about August 9, 1942, and continued to work for that company until the 5th of January, 1945, except as hereinafter mentioned. On November 28, 1944, while Hutchison was working in the shipyard as lead man of a rigging crew, he and a member of his crew were attempting to unload heavy steel plates from a railroad gondola car when he slipped and fell, striking his right side on the corner of some of the steel plates. The fall was sufficient “to knock the wind out of him”. After a few minutes he recovered his breath and continued to work for the remainder of the day. He did not report the mishap to the first aid station or notify anyone in charge of the shipyard. That evening, when Hutchison arrived home, *643 lie told his wife that he “didn’t feel very good” and that he had pains in his side. Between 11 and 12 o’clock that night he was taken to the Jones Hospital in Hillsboro and Dr. David E. Wiley of Hillsboro was summoned. Dr. Wiley did not see Hutchison until the following day, at which time Hutchison complained to him of pain and soreness in the right groin. He told Dr. Wiley that he had, just before leaving work the night before, jumped from a scaffold to a ship deck, and that a “rupture on the right side had come out suddenly”, which he had replaced. Dr. Wiley testified that he found no external bruise and nothing in the hernial sac, but that there was pain and a little swelling in the right inguinal region. He diagnosed the case as a “possible contusion of bowel”.

After Hutchison had been treated in the hospital for a few days, he had recovered sufficiently to enable him to go home, where he remained about a week before returning to the shipyard on December 11th. Subsequently to his return from the hospital his side was “touchy, and he would lay down a lot”; his clothes fitted tighter around his stomach; he had to keep loosening his belt; he had no appetite and he “just ate mostly liquids”. After he returned to work he kept complaining about his side, and “he never played with the children any more in the evenings like he had before.” One of Hutchison’s crew mates testified that he appeared to be suffering from his accident and that he was favored in his work by his crew.

On January 5, 1945, thirty-eight days after the alleged accident on the morning of November 28th, Hutchison and a crew member “went to get a load of what you call flat bar” piled in stacks. They were using cross bars to separate the bars, so that slings *644 could be put around them, when suddenly Hutchison became ill. He had no accident on that day. He was taken to the first aid station in the shipyard and from there his wife took him to the Jones Hospital in Hillsboro. Dr. Wiley was again summoned. He stated that Hutchison “was complaining of similar symptoms, pain in the groin again, the right groin”; that Hutchison stated to him “that since I had seen him last in November, or when he had left the hospital last time, that the rupture had come down a time or two again, he had replaced it, himself, but that — this was a Friday, and that day he had had a good deal — developed pain in this side, and discomfort. ’ ’ Dr. Wiley thought, when he examined Hutchison on January 5th, that he “was probably suffering similar symptoms, similar condition such as he had the time before”, and hoped that he would respond to the same treatment. For a few days there “wasn’t much change” in Hutchison’s condition, and “perhaps the pain got a little worse, if anything.” Dr. Wiley stated that on January 9th “symptoms of complete obstruction of the bowel developed with great rapidity, and I again called Dr. Pittman in consultation, and we decided to operate, and we operated, and on opening the abdomen, we found the peritoneum, or a big apron that covers the bowel, down in the hernial sac, a small amount of it, and that was adherent there, and we simply severed that at the opening of the sac and pushed it to one side, and then we, in exploring behind, we found several bands of adhesions constricting the bowel, and we severed those adhesions, and we found the small bowel much more distended than we expected to.” He stated that in his opinion these adhesions were of long standing and “were due to an old operation for ruptured appendix that he had had before,” and that the imme *645 diate cause of the insured’s death was the intestinal obstruction caused by the adhesions.

The death certificate signed by Dr. Wiley gave as the immediate cause of death, “Acute intestinal obstruction Due to Adhesions & trauma from frequent recurrence & reduction of rt inguinal hernia”. On cross-examination by defendant, Dr. Wiley, in referring to this certificate, stated: “I believe I was in error in ascribing these adhesions to the hernia rather than to the old appendix operation.” The hernia had existed for some time prior to the accident of November 28, 1944.

Dr. Alan Welch Smith was called by plaintiff as a medical expert. His qualifications were admitted by the defendant. At the conclusion of a hypothetical question propounded to him, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
189 P.2d 586, 182 Or. 639, 1948 Ore. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchison-v-aetna-life-insurance-co-or-1948.